Conventional approaches to cost benefit analysis, derived from social welfare maximization, suggest that it should ideally be adjusted to account for distributional effects. These approaches do not consider how tasks should be assigned within a large institution that includes specialized units such as the numerous agencies in the federal government. This paper considers how optimal distributive systems map onto the assignment of tasks to government agencies in such a system. It concludes that regulatory agencies should not, in general be asked to consider the distributive effects of regulations. The types of distributive adjustments that specialized regulatory agencies are able to make are not consistent with the types of distribut...
Cost-benefit analysis is analyzed using a model of agency delegation. In this model an agency observ...
CONSIDERABLE dissatisfaction has been expressed with the process and results of regulatory agency de...
This paper shows the differences between how benefits are estimated and how they are distributed, ca...
Conventional approaches to cost benefit analysis, derived from social welfare maximization, suggest...
Benefit-cost analysis (BCA) is often viewed as measuring the efficiency of a policy independent of t...
Before issuing major environmental, health, and safety regulations, administrative agencies are requ...
Benefit–cost analysis (BCA) is often viewed as measuring the efficiency of a policy independent of t...
Before promulgating a major environmental, health, or safety regulation, U.S. government agencies ar...
Before promulgating major environmental, health, or safety regulations, U.S. government agencies are...
Regulatory agencies in the United States and Europe have well‐deserved reputations for fixating on t...
Standard cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is insensitive to distributional concerns. A policy that improv...
A central question in law and economics is whether non-tax legal rules should be designed solely to ...
This paper analyzes cost-benefit analysis from legal, economic, and philosophical perspectives. The ...
On his first day in office, President Joe Biden issued an executive memorandum, “Modernizing Regulat...
Benefit–cost analysis (BCA) evaluates policy choices by summing unweighted monetary equivalents, and...
Cost-benefit analysis is analyzed using a model of agency delegation. In this model an agency observ...
CONSIDERABLE dissatisfaction has been expressed with the process and results of regulatory agency de...
This paper shows the differences between how benefits are estimated and how they are distributed, ca...
Conventional approaches to cost benefit analysis, derived from social welfare maximization, suggest...
Benefit-cost analysis (BCA) is often viewed as measuring the efficiency of a policy independent of t...
Before issuing major environmental, health, and safety regulations, administrative agencies are requ...
Benefit–cost analysis (BCA) is often viewed as measuring the efficiency of a policy independent of t...
Before promulgating a major environmental, health, or safety regulation, U.S. government agencies ar...
Before promulgating major environmental, health, or safety regulations, U.S. government agencies are...
Regulatory agencies in the United States and Europe have well‐deserved reputations for fixating on t...
Standard cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is insensitive to distributional concerns. A policy that improv...
A central question in law and economics is whether non-tax legal rules should be designed solely to ...
This paper analyzes cost-benefit analysis from legal, economic, and philosophical perspectives. The ...
On his first day in office, President Joe Biden issued an executive memorandum, “Modernizing Regulat...
Benefit–cost analysis (BCA) evaluates policy choices by summing unweighted monetary equivalents, and...
Cost-benefit analysis is analyzed using a model of agency delegation. In this model an agency observ...
CONSIDERABLE dissatisfaction has been expressed with the process and results of regulatory agency de...
This paper shows the differences between how benefits are estimated and how they are distributed, ca...